Uesato M, Nabeya Y, Akai T, Inoue M, Watanabe Y, Horibe D, Kawahira H, Hayashi H, Matsubara H. Monitoring salivary amylase activity is useful for providing timely analgesia under sedation. World J Gastrointest Endosc 2014; 6(6): 240-247 [PMID: 24932376 DOI: 10.4253/wjge.v6.i6.240]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Masaya Uesato, MD, Department of Frontier Surgery, Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine, 1-8-1 Inohana, Chuo-ku, Chiba-shi, Chiba 260-8670, Japan. uesato@faculty.chiba-u.jp
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Original Article
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Table 3 Technical status during salivary amylase activity elevation
H-group
L-group
P value
No. of elevated sAMY (times)
26
16
Operative techniques
Incision
9
4
0.430
Dissection
11
10
Hemostasis
6
2
Endoscopic direction
Straight
12
6
0.582
Inversion
14
10
Forceful endoscopic insertion or over insufflation
Presence
22
9
0.042
Absence
4
7
Table 4 Interventions used to treat salivary amylase activity elevation and the improvement in terms of body movement [number of episodes of salivary amylase activity elevation/recovery rate of salivary amylase activity (%)]
Body movement
Presence
Absence
Number (times)
17
9
Release of gastric wall tension only
2/86.2
5/66.1
Medication (pentazocine injection) only
12/94.7
3/95.9
Release and medication (pentazocine)
2/119.6
0/-
Medication (midazolam or propofol injection) only
1/124.2
1/85.6
Citation: Uesato M, Nabeya Y, Akai T, Inoue M, Watanabe Y, Horibe D, Kawahira H, Hayashi H, Matsubara H. Monitoring salivary amylase activity is useful for providing timely analgesia under sedation. World J Gastrointest Endosc 2014; 6(6): 240-247